18th Century Counterpoint: Contrapuntal Motion Flashcards
1
Q
18th century counterpoint
A
- harmony is chord quality
- fontanel tonality is how each chord functions in the piece
2
Q
writing in 18th century counterpoint
A
- the higher voice is the soprano
- the lowest voice is the bass
- the alto is the voice just below the soprano (fills in harmony)
- the tenor is the voice just above the bass (fills in the harmony)
3
Q
new with 18th century counterpoint
A
- we have more quarter and eighth note and little to no whole notes (whole notes are almost always in a bass)
- the melody is always in the soprano
- you are allowed more dissents, 7th chords are now allowed as well
- repetition is when we have the same note repeat
- oblique motion is when one note repeats and the other note(s) move up or down
- we can end a piece with a leap of a 5th to the unison in the bass (this imply the harmonic motion)
4
Q
phrase
A
- a standalone idea (like a sentence in an essay)
5
Q
cadence
A
- what we call the end of a phrase
- in a cadence we use roman numerals to describe the chord
- V to I is the strongest sounding cadence we have
- III, VI, III with a voice change is common but is not as final as V to I
6
Q
eighteenth-century note-note counterpoint does not seem as if it developed from the strict species style
A
- false
7
Q
the two most common settings of note-to-note composition can be heard in these compositions
A
- hymns and patriotic songs
8
Q
the eighteenth-century style is focused on the concepts of harmony and functional tonality
A
- true
9
Q
the repetition of intervals in a chorale melody are more common today, creating ________ motion
A
- oblique
10
Q
the feeling of tension and release are expressed by _____ intervals
A
- consonant and dissonant